When I recruited for the buy side as an investment banking analyst, I thought it would be fairly easy. After all, everybody said that investment banking was the best career path to a hedge fund. After going through the process, however, I can say from experience that there’s no easy way to the buy side. Not even for investment banking to hedge fund.

Today, we speak to an industry veteran who has done it all: engineering, investment banking, family office, hedge fund, and mutual fund. Very few people have this level of insight on how to get to the buy side by making multiple career transitions.

Needless to say, a lot of networking and career planning was involved. We’ll talk go over this person’s career in detail: networking, recruiters, nature of work, the difference between investment banking and hedge fund, and whether it was worth it.

I’ve written over 30,000 words detailing what it’s like to have an investing career. I’ve laid out the step-by-step process to get a hedge fund job for both experienced professionals and MBAs. What’s the one key takeaway from these guides? Having a killer stock pitch is what matters the most.

Making a strong stock pitch is the way to get your foot in the investment industry. It’s how you can become a professional investor.

Let’s go into the stock pitching process in detail.

This is a deep dive into analyzing and pitching stocks. We’ll go over how to screen for stocks, develop an investment thesis, analyze the company and industry, value the business, and assess the catalysts and risks.

A lot is taught on investing theories and frameworks in school. But little is said about how investment analysts actually pitch a stock.

If you’ve ever taken a finance class, you’ve probably left wondering: how do I actually put together a stock pitch the way professional investors do?

Self-confidence can be elusive, especially when you are trying to break into investing, one of the toughest careers to get into. Give yourself credit, though. Just making that career decision alone speaks volumes about you. Remember the moment that you put your foot down on having a hedge fund career? That was already a major vote of confidence in yourself. Yet, why do so many of us doubt ourselves as we dive deeper into the hedge fund job search? Why do we have constant insecurities about whether we have the right background for hedge funds?

This self-doubt is pervasive. It affects everybody who has ever thought about making a transition to asset management. I mean everybody, from the ex-Goldman Harvard Business School grads to the liberal arts college seniors.

When I was at J.P. Morgan, I thought about this debate along with most analysts around the bullpen. “What do you think it’s like working at a hedge fund vs. private equity?”

Venture capital and entrepreneurship hadn’t taken off then. Hedge fund and private equity were the 2 paths that seemed the most logical for those who wanted to stay in finance.

I leaned towards private equity. I was in distressed debt investing at the time working with private equity funds. They bought and sold distressed investments from us, which was very interesting work through the financial recession.

But after a while, the stress of bankruptcy negotiations and legal proceedings finally got to me. Having worked in the field for 3 years, I knew exactly what private equity associates did and what their career trajectories looked like. I wanted to get there.

Ben Graham once said that in the short-run, the market is a voting machine; in the long-run, the market is a weighing machine.

Technical analysis helps you think about how the market votes in the short-run. In practice, technical analysis is used by momentum and growth funds that look at short-term trends, while value investors are focused on the long-term valuation of the business and don’t use technical analysis…